Metro fares to rise next week after postponement

Jason Arunn Murugesu
BBC News, North East and Cumbria
Nexus Two men and a woman board a black and yellow Metro train towards Newcastle Airport from Platform 2 at the Stadium of Light station in Sunderland. Nexus
Metro fares are cheaper on the Pop card, Nexus says

Fares on the Tyne and Wear Metro and the Shields Ferry will rise next Tuesday.

The price increases had initially been due in April but were postponed earlier in the year by North East Mayor Kim McGuinness following the travel disruption caused by the closure of the Gateshead Flyover.

From 1 July, the cost of a single journey on the Metro using a Pop card will go up from £1.80 to £2.00 for one zone, £2.70 to £2.90 for two zones and £3.40 to £3.60 for three.

Operator Nexus said the fares needed to rise to help address the "challenges of higher operational costs".

But Nexus official Helen Matthews said fares for people aged 21 or under would remain frozen at £1.

"We are freezing fares for young people, which meets region-wide ambitions to make public transport more affordable for them and support the mayor's plans to tackle child poverty," she said.

North East mayor Kim McGuinness on board the first new Tyne and Wear Metro train in passenger service. The interior is cream, black and yellow.  She has long blonde hair and is wearing an animal print blazer.
North East Mayor Kim McGuinness postponed April's Metro fare increase until July

Paper ticket fares for the Metro are also set to rise as Nexus encouraged more people to use its pay-as-you-go (PAYG) smart card system instead.

From next week, the cost of a single journey paper ticket will go up from £2.80 to £3.00 for one zone, £3.80 to £4.00 for two zones and £4.50 to £4.70 for three zones.

"If customers switch to PAYG this year, they will be paying the same prices as paper ticket holders were paying in 2020," said Ms Matthews.

On average all fares are going up by about 4.6%, she said, even though Nexus' operational costs had increased by more than 5% over the last year.

"Metro is a public service and doesn't make a profit, so we require financial support from both central and local government, alongside the revenue that we generate from fares, to operate the system," she said.

A single journey on the Shields Ferry using a Pop card will rise from £1.50 to £1.60 next Tuesday.

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